Season after season, farmers face a silent threat to productivity. Salt buildup in the soil traps essential nutrients and prevents them from reaching the plant roots, weakening crop performance over time. And the conventional fix— adding more fertilizer—often backfires, compounding salt levels and reducing the soil’s ability to support growth. Plants struggle under stress and fall short of their full yield potential.
Fresh Tracks AG is challenging this long-standing agricultural practice.
Its emphasis is no longer on how many nutrients are applied, but on how effectively they act in the soil. At the heart of its philosophy is a simple yet powerful premise it calls “carbonate baggage.”
Most commercial fertilizer formulations are accompanied by counter-ions such as chlorides, sulphates and bicarbonates. These secondary compounds may seem harmless, but they accumulate in the soil with every application. Over time, this baggage alters soil properties and disrupts pH balance, shifting conditions away from the optimal range where key nutrients are most available. Increasing residue buildup requires more and more water to wash salts from the root zone, raising costs while putting pressure on water resources.
Growers gain immediate, tangible value from carbon management in the form of stronger crops and healthier soils, while keeping the door open to future credit opportunities
“The economic and agronomic impact is huge,” says Brian Griffith, owner and president. “Instead of driving yield, each new round of fertilizer adds to the cycle of resistance, and as the fields require more inputs to deliver the same results, soils become less responsive.”
Fresh Tracks is setting a new standard in plant nutrition by designing products that work with, rather than against, the soil. Its product portfolio centers on essential nutrients—calcium, potassium and zinc—but reformulates them without the excess salts or carbonate, which typically slow uptake and weaken soils. Delivered in cleaner forms, these nutrients act as precision tools that improve biological availability while reducing residue.
Nutrients Without the Baggage
Calcium was among the first nutrients Fresh Tracks tackled. It is indispensable for cell wall strength, fruit firmness and stress tolerance, yet conventional forms add salinity to the soil and leave residue in irrigation lines. Fresh Tracks’ Calcium XP, a foliar and fertigation formulation, delivers calcium in a plant-available form. By removing carbonate from the calcium molecule and rebinding it to soluble carbon, the nutrient remains accessible to the plant without burdening the soil with extra salts.

Kaskade Potassium is Fresh Tracks’ reformulated version of another prevalent crop nutrient. Potassium is an essential nutrient because it helps plants move sugars, develop fruit and withstand stress. The problem is that most potassium fertilizers are mixed with salts that slowly damage soil and make plants less efficient at nutrient uptake. Kaskade Potassium changes that. It is a clean formulation that combines readily with other solutions and can be applied through irrigation or sprayed directly on crops. When potassium is delivered without the extra salt, it gives plants the energy needed for growth and fruit fill while keeping soils healthier for the long term.
Zinc is also rethought as Zierra Zinc. Designed for frequent, low-dose use, it stays soluble and consistently available to the plant. To amplify the entire program, Fresh Tracks added FT HUMM, a liquid humic that improves nutrient efficiency and water movement, reinforcing soil health while supporting plant uptake.
“The best compliment we get is when growers say the results matched exactly what we promised,” says Griffith. "That’s why we don’t call ourselves a product company. We’re a problem-solving company.”
Fresh Tracks extends this problem-solving mindset to carbon footprint as well. While much of the industry talks about carbon in terms of credits and future revenue streams for farmers, the reality is that participation in those markets is complex. Long timelines and uncertain pricing make it difficult for growers to rely on credits as a stable part of their operation. By returning usable carbon directly to soil organisms, Fresh Tracks treats carbon first and foremost as fuel for biology in the soil. If carbon credits can eventually be captured, Fresh Tracks sees it as an added benefit. Growers gain immediate, tangible value from carbon management in the form of stronger crops and healthier soils, while keeping the door open to future credit opportunities.
Microbes that Work in the Real World
Fertilizers supply crops with nutrients, but plants can only take in so much on their own. For the rest, they rely on biology at the root level. Microbes play a critical role in capturing nitrogen from the air, breaking down phosphorus in the soil and releasing micronutrients in forms the plant can absorb.
Yet, the challenge is that many microbial products on the market don’t survive long enough to do the job. Strains that look impressive in controlled laboratory conditions often turn out to be too delicate for real-world farming. They lose potency during storage or die when exposed to heat or drought. When growers don’t see consistent results, they quickly lose trust in biological solutions.
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The best compliment we get is when growers say the results matched exactly what we promised. That’s why we don’t call ourselves a product company. We’re a problem-solving company
Fresh Tracks built FT Universal Microbes specifically to overcome those challenges. The blend uses spore-forming species, a type of microbe that can hibernate in a stable form until conditions are right. In storage or transport, these microbes remain dormant and resilient. But once they reach the root zone, they wake up, colonize the roots and begin to fix nitrogen and unlock nutrients. This design makes it very practical, as it withstands the rigors of farming and starts working when the crop actually needs it.
Behind this formulation is more than 30 years of microbial and enzyme research. Crops supported by FT Universal Microbes are proven to have stronger root hairs, absorb nutrients more efficiently and need less synthetic nitrogen to reach the same or better yield levels. In many programs, growers have been able to reduce nitrogen applications by 35 to 100 units per acre without sacrificing performance. For farmers, that translates into healthier plants with lower input costs and a more sustainable path to productivity.
Building Grower Trust by Connecting Chemistry and Biology

Similar product lines are available with other suppliers, but Fresh Tracks is different because its products are not designed as standalone inputs. Each was developed to fit into a broader system where chemistry and biology reinforce one another. Systems-based design provides growers with a program that has structure, timing and purpose.
Consider how the program has unfolded over the last 12 years in California’s almond ranches. Early in the season, Universal Microbes and FT HUMM establish a strong biological foundation. The microbes colonize roots and begin unlocking nutrients, while FT HUMM improves nutrient mobility and water flow. This prepares the root zone for efficient uptake. As the trees move toward bloom, Calcium XP supports cell wall formation and nut set, reducing the risk of physiological weakness later in the season. When the crop shifts into sizing, Kaskade Potassium drives the movement of sugars into the developing nuts, ensuring better fill. Meanwhile, Zierra Zinc keeps growth regulators functioning, so the crop develops evenly and consistently. Each nutrient supports the plant at its most critical stage, and biology stays engaged throughout the cycle. The grower is no longer left guessing about what to apply and when. The program provides its own roadmap.
“As a matter of fact, almond orchards became our first big test,” states Griffith. “In older trees, where productivity had flatlined, our programs delivered yield increases of up to 30 percent. Growers who had resigned to accepting plateaued returns suddenly saw new life in orchards they thought had peaked.”
Melon growers who once harvested three fruits per plant now average six. Strawberry farms report an extra 13 flats per harvest, while green chili yields have climbed by thousands of pounds per acre. The benefits extend beyond yields to below the surface. Soils also correct their pH more quickly, roots drive deeper and crops remain vigorous under stress.

Results are reinforced by how its programs are designed to work with farmers. It avoids making blanket recommendations and evaluates operations on an individual basis. Whether it involves soil profile, water quality, cropping system or economic reality, solutions are customized. And if another product on the market proves to be a better fit, Fresh Tracks will recommend that instead of its own. That level of integrity is unusual in an industry where transactions are often about selling more product, as opposed to solving the grower’s issues.
The program’s pricing and packaging further emphasize fairness and consistency over opaque practices. Every program comes with clear rates, transparent timing and defined expectations for performance. The design makes it easy for a grower, a farm manager or the person writing the checks to have an upfront understanding of both the cost and the value of the program.
Resetting the Bar on Agriscience
Quality and consistency are non-negotiable at Fresh Tracks. The products are designed to run clean through pivots and drip systems without clogging. Concentrates mix without flakes or sludge and labels line up with what agronomists see in tissue tests. It all reflects a commitment to providing growers with the best nutritional outcomes.
At the same time, the momentum behind regenerative agriculture has given farmers a framework that Fresh Tracks fits into naturally. It avoids vague sustainability promises, choosing instead to point to measurable outcomes in healthier soils, restored balance and resilient crops.
For growers under pressure to reduce inputs without losing yield, that mix of science and pragmatism is a way forward, and the proof is in the field. Infiltration rates rise as salts are flushed and carbon restored, and crop quality holds strong all the way to the packing house. These efforts clearly demonstrate that Fresh Tracks is redefining the value of inputs by shifting from additive solutions to systems-based interventions.